Some things are definitely meant not to be, like the Prophet Mohammed teaching capitalism to the West.
One
great confusion in the otherwise already greatly confused societies of
Islam is the combination and interaction of spiritual and temporal
powers. Unlike the West where Church and State are separate, independent
and each sovereign, Islam unites State and Religion together with less
than auspicious results. Because State and Religion are one and only,
for centuries Muslims have developed ways to integrate religious beliefs
with the external economic realities of the nations they lived in. This
has had varying degrees of compatibility with the empires and customs
they encountered. For example, commerce has adapted to "al-urf",
the custom. But to adapt merchantism is one thing, to build a national
financial structure with which to supervise and monitor all economic
aspects of a country is quite another. The West has done it, sure ...
after two-thousand years of history, trial and errors. How can Islam
even remotely hope to do it in twenty years.
Since the mid 80's
Muslim bankers and religious leaders have tried to develop ways to
integrate Islamic Law on usage of money with modern concepts of ethical
investing. By carbon-copying western financial systems and adapting them
to the religious tenets of the Qu'ran, the idea was to reinvent
the wheel. But the result is a hybrid of Capitalism mixed with Socialism
and sprinkled with a heavy dose of politicism so characteristic of
Islamic leaders - a kind of Frankenstein with a wicked soul, so to
speak. Unfortunately this notion of Islamic economics and finance bound
by religious tenets is a dysfunction of economic realities and an
inhibition on the development of the regions of the world where Islam is
most influential, and where traditional Islamic Law remains a factor in
the Middle East ongoing economic disappointments. The weakness of the
region's private economic sectors and its human capital deficiency stand
among the lasting consequences of the application of traditional
Islamic Law to commerce and finance.
The pivotal point upon which
this entire Islamic financial system is based, is that it operates on
the basis of 'zero interest' in accordance with Qu'ran teachings. Because the Qur'an
spoke against usury in the context of early Muslim society, it
generally entails trying to remove or redefine interest rates from
financial institutions. In doing so, Islamic economists hope to produce a
more 'Islamic society'. The new Islamic economic theory postulates that
in Islam, much like the West, central banks would be the sole issuer of
credit and money and this for very telling reasons: Islamic central
banks should be moved by public interest and their very existence should
be considered a social prerogative, so that the power to create money
should be vested in them exclusively. In a 'zero interest' society, of
course, manipulation of interest rates cannot exist. Therefore the tool
of Islamic monetary policy is to be found in the expansion and shrinkage
of base money supply, which would be allotted by central banks to
individual banks to be administered. It is further postulated as
obvious, that the larger the money supply, the more productivity it
generates and the more spending it spurs. This idea, for now, does not
seem to have worked well.
Clearly, the first problem - and perhaps
the biggest - arises in trying to model the Islamic system to the West,
where fluctuations in cost of lending are paramount to monetary
policies enacted pretty much everywhere. Monetary policies, as it is
widely known, are technically demand-side macroeconomic policies that
work by stimulating or discouraging spending on goods and services.
Economy-wide recessions and booms reflect fluctuations in aggregate demand rather than in the economy's productive capacity. Above all monetary policy is not
a supply-side instrument. Central banks have no handle on productivity
and real economic growth. Under Islam, banks would be in competition
with one another, but they would be coordinated in effect via a central
bank under the patronage of an Islamic State dedicated to the people.
The essence of this idea is that the State determines the policy of the
central bank. Furthermore, under Islam the central bank together with
the State would guard against tendencies of concentration of wealth and
power, and would take suitable steps to maintain the equilibrium of
wealth for the sake of the public interest, welfare and fraternal
living.
To have the State telling central banks what to do brings
us all the way back to the times of Leon Trotsky and the Bolshevik
Revolution. In its early times, in fact, and prior to the break-up with
Stalin, Leon Trotsky advocated a 'permanent Leninist revolution' in
which the State would control all aspects of life including, of course,
the economy. The State would dictate production and supply and direct
monetary quotas to be used by the citizenry to purchase the available
inputs. During the First and, most notably, the Second World War
approximately fifty-million Christians perished fighting over the
truthfulness, fairness and applicability of this idea. And whereas in
fact the death of all those many people could not solve the mystery, it
ultimately was the peaceful collapse of the former Union Of The Soviet
Socialist Republics that revealed the ephemeral nature of the
State-controlled economy.
Additionally, as Islamic countries may
or may not have noticed, the United States is the single biggest
importer of Islam's number one product - oil (not explosives, like I am
sure some bad mouth out there is muttering out aloud) - and the single
largest payer of Petrodollars, the lifeline of economic longevity for
many Islamic nations. I am willing to bet that it would be somewhat
problematic, to say the least, to convince the Americans - especially
the Bush Administration - that a centralized economic system based upon a
Trotskyst Bolshevik-style, Marxist - Leninist State-run model is the
best alternative and most viable option to capitalism available anywhere
in the Universe. Not even Vladimir Putin, the current president of the
Russian Federation and former KGB officer and FSB boss, talks about
State-centralized economy anymore. This new idea sounds too much like a
very old one or, to use one of America's favorite expressions,
'different day, same s..t'.
The second problem created by the
'zero interest' society is that the fundamental characteristic of
charging interest, i.e. charging a premium, on the principal amount of a
loan for the time value of the loaned money, is not truly eliminated in
Islamic banking. Rather, the interest is merely hidden and re-labeled. A
fact this, all and by itself, which goes against Qu'ran teachings in the matter of not deceiving your fellow Muslims.
Usually,
time value of money is compensated to the lender by the lender charging
the borrower interest on the principal amount of the loan. In the case
of Islamic banking, the lost time value is compensated by charging a
mark-up on the product that the client might be seeking to purchase by
way of a loan. The ownership of the product, whether a real capital
asset or personal property, remains in the name of the bank until the
principal loan including the mark-up has been paid. In the case of a
business loan, instead of charging interest over the time that the
principal amount is loaned out, an Islamic bank will demand a certain
percentage of the borrower's business profits for an indefinite period
of time. Furthermore, under a conventional interest-based loan it is
possible to 'call' the loan if the interest rate drops and the borrower
discovers that he can find cheaper financing. However, there is no way
to call a loan issued by an Islamic bank. Thus, while the borrower from
an Islamic bank is protected against interest rate increases, the
borrower cannot benefit from interest rate drops.
All this,
coupled by less than efficient social structures and political systems
in many Islamic states, contributes to the existence of quasi-feudal
living standards for the vast majority of Muslim individuals and
businessmen alike. Ironically, in the few areas where this new Islamic
economic reality has been and is now being tried and tested, rather than
finding the much coveted equilibrium the 'Islamic initiative', as it
has come to be known, seems to have exacerbated the polarization of
wealth.
Certainly it does not appear that Allah can be either
proud of or happy, at least for the time being, for the financial
under-achievements of Her devout followers.
Luigi Frascati
Luigi Frascati is a Real Estate Agent based in Vancouver, British
Columbia. He holds a Bachelor Degree in Economics and maintains a
weblog entitled the Real Estate Chronicle at http://wwwrealestatechronicle.blogspot.com
where you can find the full collection of his articles. Luigi is
associated with the Sutton Group, the largest real estate organization
in Canada, and is based with Sutton-Centre Realty in Burnaby, BC.
Luigi is very proud to be an EzineArticles Platinum Expert Author. Your rating at the footer of this Article is very much appreciated. Thank you.
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